National and Local Democrats Hit Doherty


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Brendan Doherty

It’s worth checking out the dossier the national Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee put together about Brendan Doherty and his political baggage. Among other things, they say crime went up across the board in Rhode Island while the candidate for CD1 was head of the State Police. It also paints the picture of a far-right Republican who wants to take rights away from women and hurt the working class.

The DCCC file has video of almost all his on-air interviews and appearances, links to all the local news coverage he’s received and a full-on history of his life, including every piece of property and promotion he’s ever received. Did you know he was on the board of directors for Beacon Mutual when the insurance company was mired in a scandal for giving price breaks to choice companies? (Update: Marc Comtois says he remembers Doherty being brought in by his friend Gov. Don Carcieri after the scandal broke)

But the interesting part for me was while national Democrats put together a file on Doherty’s local record, local Dems are hitting him on national issues. In a video released last week, the Rhode Island Democratic Party said Doherty will work hard to repeal health care reform and will generally move in lock step with conservative Republicans like Paul Ryan and John Boehner.

With Little Proof, Gemma Claims Progressive Mantle


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Anthony Gemma

Anthony GemmaThe Democratic primary between Congressman David Cicilline and challenger Anthony Gemma will likely be decided by Providence voters and progressives. As such, it should come as no surprise that Gemma is claiming the mantle of being the more liberal candidate in the contest.

“I’m every bit as progressive and as liberal as David Cicilline,” Gemma told me on Friday. “If progressives would look under the hood, they would see I’m their guy.”

He said he supports the DREAM Act, marriage equality and even decriminalization for small amounts of marijuana. He says he’s personally opposed to abortion, but promises to never vote against a women’s right to choose. On tax policy he talks like a progressive, calling the GOP House budget “draconian” and saying he the supports the Buffett Rule, rolling back Bush era tax cuts and even keeping in place estate taxes, though all in the name of lowering the deficit rather than investing in society for its own sake.

But Gemma, a businessman who grew his family plumbing empire into a multi-million dollar a year business and also ran a marketing and communications firm, can be hard to believe at times.

He’s also promised to create 10,000 jobs for Rhode Island in five years by bringing together public and private sector leaders to build upon a business plan he drafted for the 2010 campaign and is retooling for this one – it’s long on platitudes and short on policy proposals. Almost no one thinks such a lofty goal is a realistic campaign promise coming from someone who would be a rookie congressman, but Gemma confidently asserts he can use his team-building skills to get it done.

He’s never held public office, so he’s got no track record. And furthermore, he only registered as a Democrat a few short months before announcing his candidacy in 2010, and didn’t vote in the 2008 primary. He once donated to the campaign of conservative Republican Don Carcieri.

“I gave him a donation because I was running a business and he was definitely the pro-business candidate,” he said of Carcieri, though he said he didn’t vote for him and has never voted for a Republican.

Gemma said he supports organized labor “when unions support Rhode Island,” but again, his track record is at best, tarnished. Gem Plumbing was cited for 32 labor violations, which was “later reduced to six over the objection of the chief inspector,” according to the Associated Press, for hiring non-union plumbers when he was president of the company.

“I don’t recall exactly what happened because it was such a long time ago,” he said. “Our company was growing so fast at the time we my have made some mistakes along the way.”

Even his social networking success is suspect, a case RI Future first made in this piece: Gemma’s Suspicious Facebook Followers. He’s got more than 900,000 followers on Twitter and more than 100,000 friends on Facebook. But ask him how he amassed such a following, and he’s not talking.

“Strategically, there are ways in which to deal with social networking that I would like to write a book about,” he said. But added, “I choose not to talk about strategy during the campaign.”

He did say that it’s “certainly possible” that some of his Facebook and Twitter followers are not real people but said he has “never done the research to know how many are real and how many are fake.” When I asked if he paid for automated follows and Facebook friends he said, “Again, I’m not going to about strategy.”

So we’ll have to wait for the book to find out how he got more than 40,000 Facebook likes in one day, or why he has so many followers from Germany, Spain, Indonesia, and Dubai.

It’s not unlike how he invited reporters to a Sunday evening availability then declined to answer questions from them. Gemma seems to enjoy controlling the message, and one has to wonder if he’s doing that with his new-found fervor for progressive policy positions as well.

Why I’m Not Running for Congress, Again


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Every two years I consider the possibility of running for Congress… Again.

Yes, I ran for the US House of Representatives in 2004 in the Democratic Primary challenger to Patrick Kennedy, who had cast an insanely foolish vote for the war in Iraq.

At the time, I joked that my slogan was, “More liberal than a Kennedy.”

It’s 2012, and we’re finally out of Iraq, but the other issue that I developed during that primary run has become more imminent and remains ineffectively addressed by the current crop of wind-blowing politicians.

I’m talking about the price and cost of fossil fuel energy.

In 2004, I proposed a $.25 a gallon tax on gasoline. The money would go to fund alternative energy and public transportation. The price of a gallon at the time was about $2. “No one will pay that much!” was the UNIVERSAL reply I got from even my most liberal and environmental friends.

$4 a gallon? Just wait.

In 2004, I was talking about peak oil — nobody believed me. They laughed. That’s years away.

Now, it is generally an “accepted fact” that every year — for the rest of eternity — we will be pumping less and less gas and oil from the ground. The well isn’t dry, but it will be.

$5 a gallon? Just wait.

My final oil bill — for only 120 gallons was just over $600 — and it was a warm winter. Anybody out there run a public school? Can you tell me how many gallons of oil you burn to heat those buildings?

Have we budgeted for $6 a gallon fuel oil? For $10 a gallon?

$10 a gallon? Just wait.

Since 2004, what percentage of tax dollars have been spent funding public transportation, mass transit and alternative energy, and what percentage have gone to highways, tax cuts for oil companies and so on?

If I was running for Congress, I’d research the facts and tell you the answers.
But I’m not going to run for Congress.

Here’s why.

After my first run, I realized a few things about being a politician in the current political climate:

  1. You need to raise lots and lots of money
  2. You need to have an Ego the size of Rhode Island (or bigger)

During my campaign, I said over and over again, “I don’t want your money. I just want your vote — and tell other people.”
I got 26% of the primary vote on a budget of less than $500.
But I clearly didn’t get the message across — which needs money.

I also found that I was unwilling to ram my face and political opinions in front of thousands and thousands of people at every opportunity. I was unwilling to stand up at a memorial for Iraq war dead and wounded and say, “The war is wrong—vote for me!” When I did so at the Avon theater on the anniversary 9/11 at an anti-war film, I was hissed and booed. Hissed and booed in the bastion of liberalism because I wanted to run for Congress against the war.

Everybody who knows me, knows I have a huge ego — but it’s not that big. I don’t think I’m “The Best Man For The Job.”

But….

Every two years I look at the clowns who are running for office and running the country and I ask: Where is the leadership who will step forward and say, “We need to start planning and conserving energy NOW. We can’t wait for the invisible hand of capitalism to produce these kinds of results. Capital will be happy to drain this country dry and move to Europe, where they’ve had high gas taxes for decades—and used the funds to pay for the trains!”

What do we need? What would my platform be?

  • Raise the price of gas by 10% and increase taxes for oil companies. The increase will encourage conservation. Use the funds to plan and improve energy efficiency in ALL municipal buildings, to fund alternative energy production for homeowners, and to build trains and fund public transportation.
  • Create tax incentives now for the imminent flood of citizenry moving from the suburbs to the cities. Create energy efficient and affordable and good looking housing (talk to Keith Stokes in RI about this) so that people will be able to live near where they work and shop and play.
  • De-Authorize No Child Left Behind. End the test-test-test focus of public schooling. Use all money saved from the FUNDING INDUSTRY to hire new teachers and make class size smaller.
  • Fund public works of art
  • Encourage urban farming (talk to Cuba about this)

Finally, I’ve been thinking about the Occupy movement, and thinking that we need to find a new “Occupation” for most people. The idea that people will find “work” in a post-industrial post-oil economy is tenuous. I think that people need both work and occupations, things to occupy their time, to produce for the common good (socialism? Gasp!) and for their own livelihood and self-image.

I don’t know how “Operation Keep America Occupied” would work, but there really needs to be something more for our young people than playing Call of Duty and going to the Mall.

So, why am I not running for Congress?
Because none of the issues I’ve mentioned are electable.
Because I don’t want to ask you for money to send me to Washington.

Besides, I like it here.

Mark Binder is an award-winning author and storyteller. You can look at his “Campaign” website, and download my catchy campaign song, at: http://markbinder.com/candidate/ 

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In honor of the end of the war in Iraq and the coming end of the Afghanistan mess, Mark’s book, “Stories for Peace” is half-off. Everything else is discounted 20% for RI Future at: http://bit.ly/storyspecials

If you’d like to keep in touch with Mark’s “Storyteller” personna, please subscribe to the Storyamonth newsletter: http://storyamonth.com/


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